Cmq Germania e Francia chiedono congiuntamente che la Grecia predisponga "ulteriori misure" in tempi rapidi, e - secondo parte dei media - una riforma previdenziale quale condizione per la erogazione degli aiuti...
Germany, France signal hard line with Greece
(Reuters) -  European heavyweights Germany and France vowed on Sunday to take a hard  line with Greece in exchange for financial support as doubts emerged  over whether a 45 billion euro ($60.2 billion) aid package was  sufficient to prevent a default.
Greece bowed to intense pressure from  financial markets on Friday, requesting funds from the European Union  and International Monetary Fund (IMF) in what would be the first bailout  of a member of the 11-year-old single currency bloc.
The debt-saddled country has announced  billions of euros in austerity measures, including tax hikes and public  sector wage cuts, but must now agree additional steps to satisfy the EU  and IMF, and ensure the aid flows.
German  Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble warned Greece that a tough  restructuring of its economy was "unavoidable and an absolute  prerequisite" if Berlin and the EU were to approve the aid Greece has  requested.
"The fact that neither  the EU nor the German government have taken a decision (on providing  aid) means the response can be positive as well as negative," Schaeuble  told the Sunday edition of German daily Bild. "This  depends entirely on whether Greece continues in the coming years with  the strict savings course it has launched. I have made this clear to the  Greek finance minister."
Schaeuble's  French counterpart Christine Lagarde promised to hold Greece  accountable for "unsuitable economic policies" that pushed its 2009  budget deficit to 13.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and its  debt to 115 percent of economic output.
She  described the aid package as a "cocktail of indulgence and great  strictness," telling the Journal du Dimanche weekly that Greece's  partners would closely monitor its progress in restoring order to its  creaking finances.
"We will  (release the aid) according to their needs and in the case of default on  repayment, we will immediately put the foot on the brake," Lagarde  said.
Germany and France are due to  provide about half of the 30 billion euros in aid the EU has  tentatively pledged for Greece. The IMF is expected to put up the  remaining 15 billion.
DOUBTS ON  AID PACKAGE
Only days after Greece  requested the aid, however, doubts were emerging over whether the  package was large enough to calm market fears of a debt default.
Those fears have pushed the yield on Greek  10-year bonds above 8.7 percent, a whopping 567 basis points over the  rates on benchmark German Bunds.
This  has made it prohibitively expensive for Athens to service its mountain  of debt. Greece's formal request for aid on Friday did little to ease  market pressures.
Speaking to  reporters in Washington at the weekend, Canadian Finance Minister Jim  Flaherty acknowledged that some European and G20 countries believed the  aid was inadequate.
"There is  concern about making sure that the package is enough so that it's a  one-time event," he said.
There are  also worries about public opposition to further austerity steps in  Greece. Greek riot police fired teargas at protesters who held an  impromptu march through central Athens on Friday to protest austerity.
A poll released on Saturday showed that  roughly two-thirds of Greeks believe Prime Minister George Papandreou's  socialist government was either too slow to react or handled the economy  poorly as the country's fiscal crisis deepened.
Center-left newspaper Eleftherotypia said  the "specter of Hungary" was haunting Papandreou's government. Voters in  Hungary booted out the socialist government this month after it tried  to push through painful IMF-ordered budget cuts.
Kathimerini, a center-right newspaper, said  Greece was entering a tough and unpredictable period.
"It may turn out for the better, or it may  turn us into what the Anglo-Saxons call 'a failed state'," it said in an  editorial.
(Additional reporting  by 
Sophie  Hardach in Paris, George Georgiopolous in Athens, Tracy Rucinski in  Madrid; Writing by Noah Barkin; Editing by 
Janet  Lawrence)